Kentucky Notebook
Owner Joe Gibbs optimistic about Denny Hamlin’s health after wreck
June 30, 2013
By Reid Spencer
NASCAR Wire Service
SPARTA,
Ky.—When Denny Hamlin clobbered the Turn 4 wall at Kentucky Speedway on
Sunday, the first thought of most who watched had to be, "Oh, no, not
the back."
Fortunately,
there was no basis for concern for the driver who had missed four races
earlier this season because of a compression fracture of his first
lumbar vertebra. The
impact on Lap 147 of the Quaker State 400 NASCAR Sprint Cup Series race
was severe, and Hamlin was shaken up, but his back was fine.
Team owner Joe Gibbs visited Hamlin in the infield care center after the wreck. Hamlin was released shortly thereafter.
"I
think our cars are so safe, and to show you, in 22 years, we've only had
one person miss a race, and that was Denny, when he had the problem
earlier this year," Gibbs told
the NASCAR Wire Service. "So to be quite truthful, I didn't see it, so I
was just going back, and I didn't realize he hit that hard.
"And so
when I got back there (to the garage), he said, 'Man, I've got a
headache, like you wouldn't believe.' And he banged his knee on the
inside (of the car). Then we went
to the care center, and right away, he said, "I started feeling better
and better and better."
On Monday, Hamlin plans to go ahead with a scheduled test at Indianapolis Motor Speedway.
"They
called the doctor over there, he's going to take a look at him before he
gets in the car, but I think we are in good shape there," Gibbs said.
SALVAGE JOB
The
wreck on Lap 147 wasn't the only incident in which Denny Hamlin played a
prominent role. Early in the race, he blew a right front tire, and as
Hamlin drove slowly down
the access road to pit lane, the casing separated from the tire and
rolled onto the race track.
Polesitter
Dale Earnhardt Jr., the race leader at the time, couldn’t avoid the
tire carcass and damaged the nose and front splitter of his No. 88
Chevrolet. Led by crew chief
Steve Letarte, his team spent the rest of the race trying to make the
best of an unfortunately accident.
Though
the handling of the car was affected adversely, Earnhardt came home 12th
and solidified his sixth-place position in the series standings.
"The
guys did a good job on pit road all day long working on it and trying to
fix everything," Earnhardt said after the race. "I'm not sure we got
everything back where it
is supposed to be, but we did well enough to get a decent finish out it
- just proud of how hard the team worked.
"Did a
good job for qualifying, and put a good car out there for the race.
Can't do anything about what happened out there on the race track with
that casing. They worked hard
on it to get it right, and get it good enough where we could run well.
So, they deserve a lot of credit today."
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